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Cleaning Out Temporary Files

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Q. The folder that holds my temporary files just
keeps growing. Is there a way to clean it out automatically ?

A. Yes, there is. But first a little advisory for
those who don’t know about temporary files and aren’t aware that it’s
a good idea to clean them out regularly. When you open a file in
Windows, the system automatically stores it in a special “temp” folder
(c:windowstemp); Windows encodes the file with a name that ends in
.tmp. Then, when you close the file, the temp file usually is erased.
But, for technical reasons, Windows sometimes holds onto the file.
Over time, the temp folder can get quite large (see exhibit 1, below).
It’s a good idea to empty it. However, then you have the nuisance of
locating the folder in the Windows directory and cleaning it out. And
if you try to delete a temp file created during a current work session
rather than an earlier one, Windows often will stop you. So the best
time to empty a temp folder is after you fire up your computer but
before you open any files.

Exhibit 1

Part of a
typical temp folder.

Here’s a safe way to have your computer automatically do the job
each time you boot up: Go to Start, Run and then type
sysedit in the command line and press OK. A bunch of tiled files will
appear, as shown in exhibit 2, below. The top file probably will be
autoexec.bat . If it’s not on top, click on the Xs
in the topmost files until you get to autoexec.bat. It may be empty;
don’t worry about that. Type in the following two lines:

deltree /y c:windowstemp

md c:windowstemp

That command instructs the computer to delete the entire temp folder
and create a new, empty one each time you boot up .

Exhibit 2

A tile view
of Windows’ configuration files. On top is the autoexec.bat
file that contains the command to delete the temp folder and
create a new one.